Publication Date:
2006-02-14
Description:
The first asteroid lightcurves have now been made with a new technique of CCD photometry. The apparent magnitude is fainter (V〉17) than what can be done with the 1.52-m Catalina reflector with a photomultiplier photometer. With the CCD system, however, the lightcurve shows remarkably good repetition; finding the asteroid is, of course, no problem as the object is recognized later by its motion on the CCD. Asteroid 1985RV has a lightcurve amplitude of about 0.4 mag and its period of rotation P = 4.0 hours, on the assumption that the lightcurve has two maxima and two minima as is the case for nearly all other asteroids. The diameter is about 3 km. 1985RV is a first example of results that are being obtained on asteroids and comets with CCD in the Catalinas, Kitt Peak, and Cerro Tololo.
Keywords:
ASTRONOMY
Type:
NASA, Washington Reports of Planetary Astronomy, 1985; p 89
Format:
text